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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Dynamic buckling of thin metallic rings under external pressure

Mainy, Aurélien 19 July 2012 (has links)
The main aim of this thesis is to gain insight through experiments into how the deformation characteristics of a thin ring made of a metallic material such as aluminum depend on the strain-rate. More precisely, this study investigates the buckling behavior of thin metallic rings subjected to a dynamic radial compressive loading. To do so, a total of twelve experiments were performed: three experiments for each of four load levels. The specimens used were aluminum 6061-O circular rings, having a mean radius of 15.5 mm with a radius-to-thickness ratio of 31. The external pressure acting on the specimens was created via electromagnetic induction following a rapid discharge of high voltage through a solenoid that was specially manufactured to interact with the ring specimen. This created a magnetic field that interacted with the specimen and therefore set a pressure on it. Three experiments were performed for each of the following charge levels: 2 kV, 3 kV, 4 kV and 5 kV. These experiments created maximum external pressures in the specimens that varied between 7 MPa and 38 MPa. The dynamic response of the ring specimens was recorded using a digital high-speed camera; analyses of the images revealed the initial uniform radial acceleration of the rings followed by the onset and evolution of dynamic buckling. The buckling response of the aluminum rings revealed that several different wave lengths (or buckling modes) can be observed simultaneously. These wave lengths correspond to measured mode numbers between 3 and 44, depending on the rate of change of the applied loading with the higher modes selected at higher strain-rates. Superposition of several pictures taken at different times during the experiment shows that as the ring deforms, the buckling waves stay within the same angular sector, keeping the same mode numbers they initially selected all the way during deformation. Numerical simulations were performed with the finite element program ABAQUS and validated the observation that several different buckling modes appear simultaneously in the rings and that their localizations are governed by material and geometric imperfections in the specimens. / text
2

Možnosti odstranění zbytkových napětí v tenkých pásech pomocí tahového rovnání / Removal of residual stress in thin sheets by tension leveling

Dymáček, Martin January 2010 (has links)
Tension leveling is a process used in the steel industry in order to eliminate any shape imperfections of cold-rolled thin strips. The master thesis deals with developing a computer program that generates basic parameters of tension leveling line. The theoretical part of the thesis summarizes the types of the shape imperfections in strips, their causes and the principles of their elimination. This part also presents the mechanism of tension leveling and describes the present-day design of tension levelers. The practical part of the thesis starts with an analytical description of stress-strain behaviour of strip during tension leveling (supposing the simplified conditions). A computer program that allows devising basic parameters of tension leveling line is created on the basis of these analytical relations. The program results are successfully verified by numerical model based on the finite element method (FEM) created in the program ANSYS. Then the interdependencies of certain input and output parameters of created program are determined. These interdependencies can be used as effective design of tension leveling lines.

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